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Marble Rose Quick-Click Stiletto Automatic Knife - Pink Marble

Price:

8.25


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Rose Quillon Side-Opening Automatic Stiletto Knife - Pink Marble

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An automatic knife for sale that wears its Italian stiletto heritage on its sleeve. The Rose Quillon delivers a true side-opening, push-button snap with a sliding safety and a 3.875" polished spear point that actually locks up right. At 5.25" closed with a tip-down clip, it rides slim, but the glossy pink marble scales and bright bolsters make sure it never disappears in a collection or a pocket rotation.

8.25 8.25 USD 8.25

SB198PK

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  • Blade Length (inches)
  • Overall Length (inches)
  • Closed Length (inches)
  • Weight (oz.)
  • Blade Color
  • Blade Finish
  • Blade Style
  • Blade Edge
  • Blade Material
  • Handle Finish
  • Handle Material
  • Button Type
  • Theme
  • Safety
  • Pocket Clip

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Automatic knife for sale with real stiletto heritage

This isn’t a generic "switchblade" with pink paint. It’s a side-opening stiletto automatic knife built on classic Italian lines: long, narrow spear-point blade, quillons at the pivot, polished bolsters and pommel, and a true push-button automatic action. The twist is the glossy pink marble handle—loud enough to stand out in a case, refined enough to belong in a serious collection.

Press the button and the blade doesn’t just appear; it snaps out along a clean, consistent track and hits lockup with that satisfying mechanical punctuation you only get from a properly tuned side-opener. If you’ve handled cheap autos with weak springs and mushy buttons, you’ll feel the difference immediately.

Why this stiletto automatic knife for sale earns pocket time

On paper, it’s simple: 3.875-inch polished spear-point blade, 9 inches overall, 5.25 inches closed, about 4.56 ounces. In hand, those numbers translate into a very specific feel: palm-filling without bulk, point-forward without feeling fragile, weighty enough that the spring has authority without feeling over-sprung or twitchy.

The push button sits exactly where your thumb lands on a natural grip. The sliding safety tracks positively—you can feel it click rather than just hoping it moved. That matters when you’re carrying an automatic knife in a real pocket, not a catalog photo. The tip-down pocket clip keeps the knife oriented the same way every time, so the deployment routine becomes muscle memory instead of a surprise.

Side-opening action that rewards repetition

This is a true side-opening automatic knife, not an assisted opener pretending to be one. No wrist flick, no pre-load—just slide the safety off, press the button, and let the internal spring do its job. The pivot and spring geometry favor a clean, decisive throw rather than a violent slam, which means less long-term stress on the hardware and a more controllable feel in the hand.

Blade profile built for more than show

The spear-point blade is mirror-polished, plain edge, and long enough to be useful without getting unwieldy. The symmetrical profile gives you a fine tip for detail work while maintaining enough spine to avoid feeling like a needle. This isn’t a pry bar; it’s a slicer with Italian street DNA, dressed for modern EDC.

Design story: pink marble over classic switchblade lines

Look past the color for a moment and you’ll see the bones of a classic switchblade-style stiletto: the quillons guarding the pivot, the stacked visual of bolster–scale–bolster, and the long, uninterrupted blade line. Those elements are what collectors key in on, and they’re what separate this automatic knife from the cheap, nameless imports that all blur together.

Then the handle hits you. The scales aren’t flat pink; they’re marbled, with swirl and depth that catch light like pearlescent acrylic. Under glass, those pink marble scales act like a signal flare—especially framed by the bright steel bolsters and pommel. In hand, the gloss finish gives just enough traction from contour and shape, with the polished hardware tying it back to the heritage look.

Collector appeal: the non-tactical stiletto slot

If your roll is full of black, OD green, and stonewash, this is the knife that breaks the pattern without breaking theme. It’s still very much a stiletto automatic knife, but the pink marble introduces a fashion-forward, almost "runway" edge. That makes it an easy sell to collectors who want one unapologetically colorful auto in the rotation—and to buyers who want switchblade-style nostalgia without the usual "tactical" costume.

Automatic knife for sale that’s actually carryable

Plenty of stilettos are case queens: long, rattly, and bad in actual pockets. This one is built with carry in mind. Closed at 5.25 inches, it fills the hand without printing like a baton. The 4.56-ounce weight hits that sweet spot where gravity helps the spring finish its work, but you don’t feel like you’ve clipped a brick to your jeans.

The pocket clip is straightforward tip-down, mounted high enough to keep retrieval consistent. With the sliding safety set, you can pocket this automatic knife with confidence. When it’s time to deploy, your thumb meets the safety, then the button, in a straight, repeatable sequence. No guessing where the controls are, even if you rotate several autos.

Steel and maintenance reality

The polished stainless blade is tuned for easy upkeep and corrosion resistance over exotic edge chemistry. This is the sort of steel you wipe down, touch up on a basic stone or ceramic, and get back into service quickly. At this price point and category, reliability and low-maintenance behavior matter more than chasing marginal edge retention numbers.

Mechanism focus: automatic vs OTF vs assisted

Mechanically, this knife is a button-fired, side-opening automatic. That separates it from two other categories that buyers constantly cross-shop: OTFs and assisted openers.

Compared to an OTF (out-the-front) knife, this automatic uses a traditional pivot instead of a track and carriage system. That means fewer moving parts, a thicker blade for the footprint, and a more robust lock interface. You give up the straight-out deployment of an OTF, but you gain the classic stiletto silhouette and a simpler mechanism that’s easier to keep running.

Against an assisted opener, the line is cleaner: with an assisted knife, you start the blade manually and the spring finishes it. With this automatic knife, the button does everything. No pre-load, no flipper tab. That translates into a more dramatic, more honest "auto" feel—and it’s exactly what collectors are looking for when they buy an automatic knife instead of yet another assisted folder.

Is this automatic knife legal to carry?

This is where serious dealers earn trust: by being clear. Under U.S. federal law, automatic knives (often called switchblades) are regulated mainly in terms of interstate commerce and shipment, but day-to-day carry and ownership are controlled almost entirely at the state and local level. Some states allow automatic knives with few restrictions, some allow possession but restrict concealed carry or blade length, and others still treat switchblades as prohibited weapons.

This pink marble stiletto is a true automatic knife, so it absolutely falls under those automatic and switchblade statutes. Before you decide it’s your next EDC, you need to check your specific state and city laws—especially if you plan to carry it versus just collecting. Retailers should do the same: know which jurisdictions you’re shipping into and whether automatic knives for sale are restricted there.

Bottom line: the mechanism is honest and fully automatic; your job is to be just as honest with your local regulations. When in doubt, treat it as a collectible and transport it accordingly until you’ve confirmed legality.

What buyers ask before purchasing an automatic knife

Are automatic knives legal?

In the U.S., there’s no one-size-fits-all answer. Federal law (the Switchblade Knife Act) limits certain interstate sales and shipments of automatic knives, but doesn’t tell you what you can clip in your pocket on Main Street. That’s up to your state and, in many cases, your city or county.

Some states have modernized their knife laws and treat automatic knives similarly to other folders. Others still ban switchblades outright, restrict blade length, or limit concealed carry. Because this is a true push-button automatic with spring-fired deployment, you must treat it as an automatic/switchblade for legal purposes. Always verify your local statutes and, if you’re unsure, consult current state-level knife law resources before you buy or carry.

What’s the difference between an automatic knife, OTF, and a switchblade?

Terminology trips up even seasoned buyers, so let’s be precise. "Automatic knife" is the broad mechanical category: a blade that deploys from the handle using stored spring energy when you activate a button, switch, or lever—no assist from your wrist required. "Switchblade" is the older legal and cultural term for that same concept, and most switchblade laws are written to cover automatic knives.

"OTF" (out-the-front) describes the direction the blade travels. An OTF automatic sends the blade straight out of the front of the handle, riding on internal tracks. A side-opening automatic, like this stiletto, pivots the blade out from the side on a hinge. Both are automatic knives; one is an OTF automatic, the other is a side-opener. Assisted openers sit in a different bucket entirely—they require you to start the blade manually before the spring takes over, which is why many jurisdictions treat them differently.

What makes this automatic knife worth buying?

Mechanically, it’s honest: a real push-button automatic with a sliding safety, tuned for repeatable deployment and solid lockup instead of show-only theatrics. Ergonomically, the 5.25-inch closed length and 4.56-ounce weight put it squarely in the usable EDC range, not just the "drawer queen" category.

Visually, the pink marble scales over true stiletto hardware make it a standout. You get recognizable Italian-style switchblade lines without the played-out black-and-brass costume. In a collection, it fills the non-tactical, style-forward auto slot. In a display case, it’s the knife that makes casual shoppers stop, double-take, and ask, "Can I see that one?" That combination of real mechanism, carryable proportions, and unapologetic color is exactly what separates a forgettable automatic knife from one that earns the front row.

In the end, this is an automatic knife for sale that doesn’t apologize for being both a tool and an aesthetic choice. If you’re the kind of buyer who cares how a spring feels when it drives a blade home—and you’re not afraid of a little color in your lineup—this pink marble stiletto belongs in your rotation.

Own it because you know the difference between an automatic, an OTF, and a switchblade—and you want a side-opening automatic knife that wears that knowledge in polished steel and marble pink.

Blade Length (inches) 3.875
Overall Length (inches) 9
Closed Length (inches) 5.25
Weight (oz.) 4.56
Blade Color Silver
Blade Finish Polished
Blade Style Spear Point
Blade Edge Plain
Blade Material Steel
Handle Finish Glossy
Handle Material Marble
Button Type Push button
Theme Stiletto
Safety Sliding safety
Pocket Clip Yes